Month: June 2016

It started out with a tweet. I simply wanted to figure out how many traditional peer reviews students did during their PhD, mostly out of sheer curiosity. Here are the results below: How many formal peer reviews did you do/have you done during your PhD? — Dr. Jon Tennant (@Protohedgehog) June 22, 2016 So one-third […]

This was originally posted here. This interview presents the perspectives of an early-career researcher who conducts research, publishes papers, attends academic conferences as part of his PhD, travels to different parts of the world to help educate researchers about open research and science policy, blogs actively, serves as a peer reviewer, and makes time for […]

Quoted in this BMJ piece on live tweeting at academic conferences. Enjoy! 🙂 You’re at a conference and you see or hear something that will interest and inform people in the wider world. It’s the easiest thing to get your phone out and tweet a quote or photo, perhaps of a slide, poster, or study […]

Edit: This is part of an interview series I did for Editage Insights. Enjoy! Jon Tennant is currently a final year PhD (palaeontology) student at Imperial College London in the Department of Earth Science and Engineering. His research focuses on patterns of biodiversity and extinction in deep time and the biological and environmental drivers of these […]

Some important information here regarding the future of the UK universities relationship with Elsevier. Also emphasises some key points about why academics perhaps aren’t best pleased with this publisher.

OpenCon is the bestest most awesomest conference of the year. Applications are now open for it: https://secure.opencon2016.org/apply/ and anyone with an interest in any aspect of the ‘world of open’ should apply. Here are the important parts of my application, for complete transparency: Why are you interested in Open Access, Open Education and/or Open Data and […]